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Transcript
Chapter 14 – Chemical Analysis • Review of curves of growth • How does line strength depend on excitation potential, ionization potential, atmospheric parameters (temperature and gravity), microturbulence • Differential Analysis • Fine Analysis • Spectrum Synthesis The Curve of Growth • • The curve of growth is a mathematical relation between the chemical abundance of an element and the line equivalent width The equivalent width is expressed independent of wavelength as log W/l Wrubel COG from Aller and Chamberlin 1956 Curves of Growth Traditionally, curves of growth are described in three sections • The linear part: – The width is set by the thermal width – Eqw is proportional to abundance • The “flat” part: – The central depth approaches its maximum value – Line strength grows asymptotically towards a constant value • The “damping” part: – Line width and strength depends on the damping constant – The line opacity in the wings is significant compared to kn – Line strength depends (approximately) on the square root of the abundance The Effect of Temperature on the COG • Recall: Fc Fn ln constant Fc kn – (under the assumption that Fn comes from a characteristic optical depth tn) • Integrate over wavelength, and let lnr=Na • Recall that the wavelength integral of the absorption coefficient is e 2 l2 N w constant mc c f kn • Express the number of absorbers in terms of hydrogen • Finally, Nr g NA NH e NE u (T ) kT e 2 N r N E log log 2 N H log A log gfl log kn l mc u(T ) w The COG for weak lines e 2 N r N E log log 2 N H log A log gfl log kn l mc u(T ) w Changes in log A are equivalent to changes in log gfl, , or kn For a given star curves of growth for lines of the same species (where A is a constant) will only be displaced along the abcissa according to individual values of gfl, , or kn. A curve of growth for one line can be “scaled” to be used for other lines of the same species. A Thought Problem • The equivalent width of a 2.5 eV Fe I line in star A, a star in a star cluster is 25 mA. Star A has a temperature of 5200 K. • In star B in the same cluster, the same Fe I line has an equivalent width of 35 mA. • What is the temperature of star B, assuming the stars have the same composition • What is the iron abundance of star B if the stars have the same temperature? The Effect of Surface Gravity on the COG for Weak Lines • Both the ionization equilibrium and the opacity depend on surface gravity • For neutral lines of ionized species (e.g. Fe I in the Sun) these effects cancel, so the COG is independent of gravity • For ionized lines of ionized species (e.g Fe II in the Sun), the curves shift to the right with increasing gravity, roughly as g1/3 Effect of Pressure on the COG for Strong Lines • The higher the damping constant, the stronger the lines get at the same abundance. • The damping parts of the COG will look different for different lines The Effect of Microturbulence • The observed equivalent widths of saturated lines are greater than predicted by models using just thermal and damping broadening. • Microturbulence is defined as an isotropic, Gaussian velocity distribution x in km/sec. • It is an ad hoc free parameter in the analysis, with values typically between 0.5 and 5 km/sec • Lower luminosity stars generally have lower values of microturbulence. • The microturbulence is determined as the value of x that makes the abundance independent of line strength. Microturbulence in the COG -3 5 km/sec Log w/lambda -4 0 km/sec -5 0 km/sec 1 km/sec -6 2 km/sec 3 km/sec 5 km/sec -7 -13 -12 -11 -10 -9 -8 -7 Log A + Log gf Questions – At what line strength do lines become sensitive to microturbulence? Why is it hard to determine abundances from lines on the “flat part” of the curve of growth? -6 Determining Abundances • Classical curve of growth analysis • Fine analysis or detailed analysis – computes a curve of growth for each individual line using a model atmosphere • Differential analysis – Derive abundances from one star only relative to another star – Usually differential to the Sun – gf values not needed • Spectrum synthesis – Uses model atmosphere, line data to compute the spectrum Jargon • [m/H] = log N(m)/N(H)star – log N(m)/N(H)Sun • [Fe/H] = -1.0 is the same as 1/10 solar • [Fe/H] = -2.0 is the same as 1/100 solar • [m/Fe] = log N(m)/N(Fe)star – log N(m)/N(Fe)Sun • [Ca/Fe] = +0.3 means twice the number of Ca atoms per Fe atom Solar Abundances from Grevesse and Sauval CNO Log e (H=12) 8 Fe 5 Sr, Y, Zr Sc 2 Ba Li, Be, B Eu -1 10 20 30 40 50 Atomic Number 60 70 80 Basic Methodology for “Solar-Type” Stars • Determine initial stellar parameters – – – – Composition Effective temperature Surface gravity Microturbulence • Derive an abundance from each line measured using fine analysis • Determine the dependence of the derived abundances on – Excitation potential – adjust temperature – Line strength – adjust microturbulence – Ionization state – adjust surface gravity Projects! • • • • You may work in teams (1, 2 or 3 students) Perform an analysis of the spectrum Confirm the atmospheric parameters (optional) Measure the abundance of the atomic species in homework 3 • Use Moog: • Chris Sneden – MOOG • or use the computers in Rm 311 with Moog already installed Data • Select one of the data archives – FTS archive • Wallace & Hinkle 1996, APJS, 107, 312 • DPP: NOAO Digital Library – ELODIE archive • Prugniel & Soubiran 2001, A&A, 369, 1048 • The ELODIE archive – Others? – Work with published EQW data • Select a sample of stars, at least one per team member What’s known? • Review the literature for your selected object • extant photometry • 2MASS, ISO data? • radial velocity measurements? • IUE/STIS spectra? • previous atmospheric analyses? • metallicity determinations? (see Catalogue of [Fe/H] (Cayrel de Strobel+, 1997) Step 3 • Measure equivalent widths/detailed COG • Spectrum Synthesis? • Use Thevenin line data – wavelength – e.p. – gf • may work differentially to Arcturus (optical or IR) or the Sun if needed